Rover":1ki2kkc2 said:
1) What types of nets are there and what are they used for? (ie what's the difference between barrier and hand netting)
2) Why is it so hard to get the right netting? It seems that of there is an entore industry out there needing it, someone would pop up and supply it. And why do the fisherman continue to use it if it is wrong?
First:
1) Hand nets
2) Sorting nets
3) Butterfly nets
4) Barrier nets
#1 and #3 use the plastic netting that the MSI fund supplied in great abundance.
#2 are generally hand-made using monofiliment.
#4 - These are the nets Steve makes the big deal about.
Second question:
It isn't at all hard to get ahold of. The cheap barrier netting is readily available. It isn't 'wrong' so much as that it is of inferior quality. Filipinos being what they are, they make do with it. Some actually weave their own nets off-season.
The question is whether or not they need the premium quality netting material. Steve had made it very clear that the answer in his mind is yes. And I have no doubt that the average net fisherman, given the choice between the two, would choose the premium quality netting material if it was given to him. It is not, however, readily available to them.
The real question though is whether a net fisherman could catch more fish with the premium quality net than the lesser quality net. I'm not sure that it will really make that much of a difference. Don't get me wrong - I'm all for supplying them with the better quality net! But I have to wonder if the level of energy expended on this single, seemingly minor, issue could not have been better spent elsewhere? It has been pointed out that the cheaper net will rip easily on corals. Filipino high technology has solved that aspect - They add a few inch strip of the nylon mesh netting at the bottom of the net as the nylon mesh is far stronger. And although it is visible, being that it hugs the bottom, the fish don't perceive it anyway.
The cheaper net is something that they use on a daily basis, and it works.
I think Dave hit the larger issue on the head- Getting cyanide divers to switch requires that they learn a new set of skills, and it requires some innate skill and problem solving ability. They have to know the fish better than the fish know themselves, and they have to know the reef. All the holes, all the hiding spots, etc. If they don't 'get it', they are going to go back to what they know. After all, they gotta eat. Giving them Cadillac nets ain't gonna stop them.
Regards.
Mike Kirda